HomeMy WebLinkAboutDEQ-CFW_00082210Michael S. Regan, Secretary
En vircm m. en ta
Quall�y
Release: FdMEDIATE Contact: Jamie Kritzer
Date: June 19, 2017 Phone: 919-707-8602
I I I
RALEIGH — Staff with the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality will sample the water in the Cape Fear River for an
unregulated chemical compound known as GenX starting today and continuing Thursday.
DEQ staff will sample at 13 locations this week and will continue collecting samples for analysis in the same locations for
the next three weeks. Today, DEQ staff in the Fayetteville regional office are collecting water samples at the Chemours
plant that produces GenX during industrial processes, the Bladen Bluff intake and their finished water, and a water supply
well in Bladen County.
On Thursday. DEQ staff in the Wilmington regional office plan to sample the Lower Cape Fear Water and Sewer
Authority's intake, the International Paper intake, the International Paper finished water, the Cape Fear Public Utility
Authority's finished water, the Pender County public utility's finished water, the Brunswick County public utility's
finished water, the Cape Fear Public Utility's Aquifer Storage and Recovery well, and the Wrightsville Beach water supply
well.
Officials are waiting three days between samphnfF events since that is the estimated travel time for the Cape Fear to flo�v
Fayetteville to the downstream river nearWilmington. Officials are trying
the 70 miles from the Chemours plant In R I I I I I I
to sample similar water parcels in the two areas for a. more consistent and representative analysis.
DEQ staff, in consultation with state Department of Health and Human Services, are investigating the presence of the
unregulated compound known as GenX that was detected in the Cape Fear River.
State environmental regulators will collect the water samples and will send those to two laboratories capable of detecting
GenX in water at low concentrations.
After meeting with DEQ staff last week, Chemours agreed to bear all costs for the water collection and testing. The state
believes the completed results will be back from the laboratory in Colorado within four weeks from when the samples are
received. But multiple rounds of testing and analysis will be necessary for a meaningful evaluation of the water quality.
Samples also will be sent to the Environmental Protection Agency's lab in the Research Triangle Park. Officials have not
yet determined a timeline for when analysis from the EPA lab would be completed.
To learn more about sampling locations, please contact Jamie Kritzer, communications director for DEQ, at 919-707-8602.
444
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ncdenr
1601 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1601 RSS feed: littp://portal.ncdenr.org/web/opa/iiews-releases-
rss
Twitter: http://twitter.com/NCDENR
An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
DEQ-CFW-0008221 0